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April 17, 2025

Article of the Day

Understanding Psychopathic Tendencies: What You Need to Know

Introduction Psychopathic tendencies, often depicted in movies and television as cold-blooded killers, are a subject of fascination and fear for…
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In film, the word “cut” is a command. It halts the scene, freezes the moment, and brings everything to a stop. It’s necessary in directing — but in life, many people overuse it. We cut before things unfold. We cut conversations short. We cut people off. We cut off our own momentum at the first sign of discomfort or uncertainty.

The question is worth asking: If we all stopped saying “cut,” would we get a little more action?

Would we see more honesty, more progress, more clarity, and more transformation if we stopped interrupting ourselves and each other?


Cutting Too Soon: The Fear of Unfinished Scenes

In real life, people say “cut” in different ways:

  • Ending a difficult conversation before the truth comes out
  • Abandoning a goal the moment it stops being convenient
  • Pulling back in relationships to avoid vulnerability
  • Quitting creative projects at the first sign of self-doubt
  • Censoring thoughts that could open doors to meaningful change

This habit is rarely conscious. It’s driven by fear — of being wrong, of being judged, of what happens if things don’t go as planned. So we cut. We pause. We retreat. And in doing so, we trade growth for safety.

But in every story worth telling, the tension comes right before the breakthrough. The real action happens after the moment we’re most tempted to walk away.


Action Only Happens If You Stay in the Scene

Progress doesn’t happen during the cut. It happens in the moment after — when the character chooses to stay, to speak, to risk something new. The same is true in life.

Want more honesty in your relationships? Stay in the conversation.
Want better ideas? Keep writing past the part where you get stuck.
Want stronger connections? Stop hiding when things get real.
Want growth? Sit through the tension instead of shutting it down.

The longer you stay in the scene, the more likely you are to discover what’s actually possible.


Why We Say “Cut” Too Soon

  1. Discomfort feels dangerous
    Our nervous system is wired to avoid threat. But emotional discomfort is not danger — it’s just unfamiliar.
  2. We fear being seen
    Vulnerability can feel like exposure. But without it, there is no connection, no honesty, and no real story.
  3. We want control
    Saying “cut” lets us feel in charge. But sometimes, the best things unfold when we let the scene play out.

The Case for More Action

Life isn’t a perfectly edited film. It’s raw, unpredictable, and full of unrehearsed moments. And that’s where the action is — not the spectacle, but the motion, the change, the growth that only happens when you stay engaged.

More action means:

  • Letting the conversation finish, even if it’s awkward
  • Finishing the workout even when you want to stop
  • Publishing the work even if it’s not perfect
  • Showing up even when you feel unsure
  • Trusting that momentum comes from motion, not pause

Final Thought

“Cut” can be useful. It creates boundaries, offers rest, and marks a transition. But if it becomes your default — your escape hatch — you rob yourself of the movement that creates meaning.

So the next time you’re tempted to shut it down, walk away, or call it a wrap, ask yourself: What if I stayed just a little longer? What might happen if I let this scene keep going?

Maybe the answer isn’t more edits, more breaks, or more control.

Maybe what life needs is less cutting — and a little more action.


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